The Last River

The Last River Life Along Arkansas's Lower White

Hardback (30 Aug 1993)

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Publisher's Synopsis

With 68 compellingly beautiful photographs, Turner Browne documents a fast-disappearing way of life for the people who live on the lower White River and issues a plea to save the river from irreversible damage by the Army Corps of Engineers. By demonstrating that the endless dredging and flood control projects of the ever-active Corps are destroying the river's natural beauty and the livelihoods of those who make the river their only home - on houseboats and along its banks - he argues graphically and heroically for the preservation of a unique culture and of a great river. The black-and-white photographs, taken between Batesville, Arkansas, and the confluence with the Mississippi River, tell a story of loss, nostalgia, and fortitude as they portray the river's remarkable character and the exceptional lifestyles of acorn gatherers, sturgeon fishers, mussel divers, and others who extract a meager but satisfying existence from the river's resources. The damage the Corps of Engineers has wrought, including cleared forests, piles of debris, and "containment structures," certainly tolls a death knell for much of this natural waterway. The Last River is a journey, a journey probably never to be taken again.

Book information

ISBN: 9781557282910
Publisher: The University of Arkansas Press
Imprint: University of Arkansas Press
Pub date:
DEWEY: 976.72
DEWEY edition: 20
Language: English
Number of pages: 115
Weight: 1002g
Height: 265mm
Width: 260mm
Spine width: 17mm